Displaying 1281 - 1300 news posts of 1425
Stanford names former Genentech scientist as new president
Marc Tessier-Lavigne, president of The Rockefeller University in New York City, will become Stanford University's 11th president on Sept. 1
Your High-Intensity Feelings May Be Tiring You Out
Why are we always exhausted at the end of a workday? Why do we come home wiped out, with barely enough energy to make dinner before collapsing for the night?
What were you just looking at? Oh, wait, never mind – your brain’s signaling pattern just told me
Brain scientists have devised an algorithm that spontaneously decodes human conscious thought at the speed of experience.
Thomas Clandinin is named the first Shooter Family Professor
Thomas Clandinin, professor of neurobiology, has been appointed the first Shooter Family Professor, created to support a member of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.
What If: Your Brain Confesses?
As neuroscientists decipher the workings of the brain, new questions will be raised about decoding memories, ascertaining intentions and defusing criminal behaviour. What if neuro-evidence is invited into the courtroom?
Staying Human
As emerging technologies open up new prospects for enhancing health and productivity, how can we ensure that our humanity and humanness are not lost?
Neuroscience, Law, and Free Will
Will neuroscience revolutionize the practice of criminal law? Might it fundamentally change the criminal justice system by undercutting the notion of “free will” once and for all?
Why Some People Take Breakups Harder Than Others
Part of it depends on whether they believe personality is fixed or constantly changing.
Two lessons from ant colony organization
Learning about how ants organize their collective behavior may help us to understand other systems.
Are we ready for genetically modified animals?
Imagine a world with less expensive and more resilient crops, plants that can meet the world’s need for liquid biofuels, no more malaria-carrying mosquitos, real blue roses, living woolly mammoths, unicorns and a few devastating new plagues.
New perspective: Potential multiple sclerosis drug is actually old (and safe and cheap)
About 400,000 people in the United States are affected by multiple sclerosis (often referred to by the acronym MS), an autoimmune disorder in which rogue immune cells attack the insulating layer surrounding many nerve cells in the central nervous system.
Odds are good that risky gambling choices are influenced by a single brain connection, Stanford research shows
Whether a person will place a risky bet comes down to a newly discovered tract of neurons spanning two brain regions. The findings could help understand and treat gambling or addiction disorders.
Scientist Scans His Brain Twice A Week For 18 Months
It’s particularly rare that it’s the scientists themselves being examined, but one Stanford psychologist decided to do just that by monitoring his own brain activity for a year and a half.
Stroke recovery in mice improved by Ambien
Zolpidem, better known by the trade name Ambien, increased the rate at which mice that had strokes recovered their pre-stroke sensory acuity and motor coordination.
Building for collaboration spurs innovative science
When Stanford’s original main quad was built 125 years ago, it was with the intent of bringing faculty together in its outdoor spaces and walkways. From its inception, the university was a place where faculty were encouraged to collaborate across discipli
Scientists reveal brain circuit mechanisms underlying arousal regulation
A new study shows that a circuit in a brain structure called the thalamus acts like a radio, with different stations operating at different frequencies and appealing to different “listening audiences.”
Brain radio: Switching nerve circuit’s firing frequency radically alters alertness levels in animal models
Part of the brain could act like a radio, with different stations operating at different frequencies, playing different kinds of music and variously attracting or repelling different “listening audiences.
At Stanford, Rep. Jerry McNerney discusses life in Congress, science funding and the value of squash
Some neuroscience faculty, staff and students got a look behind the scenes of what it’s like to be a scientist in government on Friday from congressman Jerry McNerney, PhD.